Liquid crystal

Bibliography

Works on solids in general include Lawrence H. Van Vlack, Elements of Materials Science and Engineering, 6th ed. (1989), an elementary textbook; Charles A. Wert and Robb M. Thomson, Physics of Solids, 2nd ed. (1970), an intermediate-level text; Charles Kittel, Introduction to Solid State Physics, 6th ed. (1986), the standard college textbook; Neil W. Ashcroft and N. David Mermin, Solid State Physics (1976), an advanced textbook; George E. Bacon, The Architecture of Solids (1981), an introduction to bonding and structure; and Linus Pauling, The Nature of the Chemical Bond and the Structure of Molecules and Crystals, 3rd ed. (1960, reissued 1989), the classic reference work on chemical bonding.

The history of liquid crystals in particular is surveyed by H. Kelker, “History of Liquid Crystals,” Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals, 21(1 and 2):1–48 (May 1973). The Nobel Prize acceptance lecture by P.G. de Gennes, “Soft Matter,” Reviews of Modern Physics, 64(3):645–648 (July 1992), sets liquid crystals in a broader scientific context. Discussions of special topics in liquid crystals, frequently at a level close to this article, may be found in the periodical Condensed Matter News (bimonthly). More technical presentations are given in P.G. de Gennes, The Physics of Liquid Crystals (1974); S. Chandrasekhar, Liquid Crystals, 2nd ed. (1992); and P.S. Pershan, Structure of Liquid Crystal Phases (1988). Applications of liquid crystals are described in E. Kaneko, Liquid Crystal TV Displays (1987); and J. Funfschilling, “Liquid Crystals and Liquid Crystal Displays,” Condensed Matter News, 1:12–16 (1991).